One croissant video. Thirty days of algorithmic identity theft. Why Alphabet’s content strategy is a junk drawer masquerading as personalization.
I watched one video about croissants. That was a month ago.
It wasn’t a deep dive. I didn’t build a starter. I didn’t laminate. I didn’t even preheat the oven. I just… watched. A flaky, hypnotic little pastry spiral.
Thirty days later, I’m still dodging baguettes and brioche on my feed like I’m trapped in a Food Network fever dream. And just when I thought the algorithm would cool its buttered obsession?
The Algorithmic Carb Coma™
turniphed
Enter: The A-Team.
That’s right. I went from croissants to Mr. T. From laminated dough to laminate floors in a van with a mounted turret. YouTube decided I must be in some kind of psychological reboot—like I changed religions because the last one fell out of fashion.
And here’s the part that should terrify anyone who thinks they have any control over their digital identity: I never even clicked “Like.”

One Croissant to Rule Them All
What does it say about a platform when watching a single video sends you down a month-long spiral into someone else’s personality?
It says the system was never designed to understand you.
Because apparently, the algorithm took that one croissant video as a marriage proposal. It wasn’t just a click—it was a vow. And now I can’t watch a Star Citizen update or a sci-fi documentary without some laminated pastry sneaking in to whisper “remember us?”

What Did YouTube Learn About Me? Nothing.
Let’s break it down. Here’s what actually defines me as a viewer:
- Star Citizen nerd with an unhealthy obsession for space logistics
- Sci-fi, tech ethics, AI design, history nerd tangents
- Engineering, system breakdowns, world-building, digital infrastructure
- Occasional croissant curiosity (OCC)
But none of that nuance made it through the filter. YouTube saw one flaky video and did what it always does—flattened my entire digital identity into that one moment. Then it served me stale leftovers for weeks. Including The A-Team, because apparently the AI thinks flaky dough = nostalgia, and nostalgia = 1983 action television.
(Also, side note: Can soy sauce even expire? Because I feel like YouTube’s recommendation drawer is full of those mystery packets from ten years ago.)

The Junk Drawer Is Not a Strategy
YouTube, like most of Alphabet, pretends its recommendation engine is a masterwork of personalization. In reality? It’s a glorified junk drawer.
No folders. No interest lanes. No way to say “this is a casual flirtation, not a long-term relationship.” Just chaos. Unsorted. Unapologetic.
You don’t get a feed tailored to your real interests. You get a content mulch-pile built from what the algorithm thinks you are—based on time spent, not context understood.
Cable-Cutting Was the Opportunity. They Missed It.
This could’ve been their big innovation moment. When people cut cable, they didn’t just reject channels—they wanted control. They wanted relevance. They wanted to curate their lives, not be shuffled into a content daycare.
Alphabet had the infrastructure. They had the user base. What did they do? Slapped autoplay on everything and called it “recommendation.”
Here’s what real innovation would’ve looked like:
- Interest Silos: Let me keep my sci-fi feed separate from my baking experiments.
- Weighted Preferences: “This is a passion,” vs. “This was 3AM curiosity.”
- Undo and Ignore Trails: “Forget that click. Don’t follow that rabbit hole.”
- Support ≠ Subscription: One Like should not be an eternal blood oath to a creator’s entire back catalogue.

This Isn’t Discovery. It’s Algorithmic Amnesia.
Alphabet calls it discovery. But when it resets your personality over a croissant? That’s not discovery. That’s algorithmic amnesia. The system keeps forgetting who you are just because you clicked one thing out of curiosity.
That’s not “learning.” That’s losing the plot.
I didn’t unsubscribe from my values. I didn’t renounce engineering, narrative design, or cosmic navigation. I didn’t enter witness protection. I watched a pastry video and somehow ended up in 1984 with a mohawked mercenary offering me a ride.

Final Thought: I Pity the Fool Who Calls This Personalization
YouTube’s algorithm isn’t personal. It’s opportunistic. One Like is all it takes to throw away years of relevant, layered, intelligent content curation.
If Alphabet had any real ambition left, they’d fix this. They’d give us the tools to manage our own interests, tag our own trails, and actually build a digital identity worth keeping.
Until then, we’re just passengers in a van we didn’t call, watching a show we didn’t request, wondering how we got from pastry to pyrotechnics in under 30 days.
[ts_support_turnip_style]

Missed our first rant on YouTube’s chaotic TV interface?
Catch the original editorial that started it all:
“The 5 Stages of Finding a Video on YouTube TV” → [read it here]








